Kore-eda's solution, however, has the distinction of being unique - a quality that is rare in motion pictures of any sort, and is especially unusual in a movie set in this arena. The premise is one that has intrigued human beings since the dawn of history: what happens after death. Kore-eda's follow-up to Maborosi is After Life, a much different kettle of fish. Maborosi was not widely distributed, but it is available on video, and its nearly perfect composition caused film critic Roger Ebert to award it a slot in his first Overlooked Film Festival. Hirokazo Kore-eda stunned audiences with his vividly realized, emotionally resonant depiction of a young widow's struggle to piece together her life in the wake of her husband's inexplicable suicide. The release of 1995's Maborosi introduced the world to a major new force in Japanese film making.
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